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(1859–1932). When
Kenneth Grahame’s small son Alastair went on a vacation, he asked his father to continue his bedtime stories by mail. These installments, mailed daily, became the first chapters for one of the best known of all children’s books, The Wind in the Willows (1908).

Kenneth Grahame was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, on March 8, 1859. He was the third of four children born to James Cunningham Grahame, a lawyer, and Bessie Ingles Grahame. When Kenneth was 5 years old, his mother died, shortly after giving birth to his brother Roland. Kenneth’s father arranged to have the children live with relatives in Berkshire, England. In 1866 he sent for them to live with him in Edinburgh, but the next year he was forced to send them back to England.

In 1868 young Grahame entered St. Edward’s School at Oxford, England. He did well in both studies and sports, graduating in 1875. He wanted to go on to college but did not have enough money. In 1879 he became a clerk in the Bank of England. There he advanced steadily to become an officer of the bank.

During his spare time Grahame wrote children’s stories. These were published in book form as The Golden Age (1895) and Dream Days (1898). “The Reluctant Dragon,” one of the stories in Dream Days, was made into a Walt Disney feature film.

In 1899 Grahame married Elspeth Thomson, a Scottish woman. Alastair was their only child. He was born the year after their marriage and died at age 20 in an accident.The Wind in the Willows was published in1908, around the same time that Grahame retired from the bank. He died at Pangbourne, Berkshire, on July 6, 1932.

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